the inner city Good Life…

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Monthly Archives: June 2007

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I finally got my invitation to Ravelry a couple of weeks ago, and then spent so much time playing with it that I forgot to blog about it. If I haven’t added you to my friends yet please let me know and I will do so!

I still don’t have any wineglasses, they are a luxury that will have to wait until I get a job. However I did indulge in one little luxury this week: a bottle of Stoneleigh Sauvignon Blanc that was on special at the local supermarket. I also have a little blue and white china teacup that has proved the next best thing in terms of drinking vessels – it’s the perfect size and with the curved bottom and sides, not a bad shape either. I’d definitely go for china over plastic, a chipped coffee mug, or a glass tumbler, which are my other choices.

The Stoneleigh really is rather good, but it got me thinking about all of the wines I can’t have now I’m here. I’m sure they can be found somewhere but only for a price, and of course a lot of the wines have export labels I won’t recognise and so forth. Plus I have a whole new world of wine to discover and enjoy.

Here is a list of some of my favourite Marlborough sauvignons, listed roughly from most expensive to least. In most cases I have tasted multiple vintages of these wines, and they are consistently good. This is just my personal taste though, basically everything in the list is in a similar style so if you like one you will probably like the others.

Cloudy Bay. Everyone, everywhere knows about Cloudy Bay, so there is no need to elaborate. Costs a fortune here, so I won’t be tasting it again for some time. However, I’m not sure I’m inclined to ever since Cloudy Bay (in turn owned by Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton) bought up Cellier Le Brun, producer of the best sparkling wine in New Zealand, ripped up the vines and replanted with sauvignon. $2.3 million, and a fabulous wine we will never taste again. Was it worth it?

Astrolabe. Made by Simon Waghorn, Louise and Claire‘s uncle. Multiple award-winning, consistently good (in fact it seems to be getting better every year) and sometimes you can get it on special for $18.

Whitehaven and White’s Bay. More Simon Waghorn wines, minus the extra $$ you pay for the poncy Astrolabe name.

Dashwood and Maven, both in the $15ish range, are quite drinkable, with more complexity than those later in this list. Maven also has beautiful labels, if you go for that sort of thing (and I do).

Stoneleigh. Delicately fruity and fine straight from the fridge (don’t get me started on the “temperature white wine should be drunk at” debate).

St Clair. Under NO circumstances should you ever drink the Vicar’s Choice wine. This is their budget label with a fancy name, and it tastes like battery acid. Their regular sauv is good though, and while I haven’t tried their specialty labels I imagine they would also be a good bet.

Villa Maria. Also fine, and has the advantage of being very widely available. UK readers take note.

Montana. I’m not the greatest Montana fan in the world, it’s just a little too mass-produced for my tastes (it always tastes the same!!). There’s nothing particularly offensive about it, it’s just the McDonalds of Marlborough sauvignons. If you are going to a picnic, the beach, etc, anywhere you will drink wine out of a plastic cup, take this. It tastes ok and plastic would ruin anything further up the list.

Right, now that I have that little bit of wine snobbery out of the way, some reflections: Brits just don’t seem to care about what they eat and drink the way we do in New Zealand. But I don’t mean that in a bad way. For many people here wine still comes in two varieties – red, or white. We are true food snobs when I think about it. Which is why the cafe Flat White I mentioned the other day does so well – it serves the best coffee in London so New Zealanders come from all over to drink it.
I went to a cooking demonstration by Rose Elliot today and watched as she used a grater she’d had since before she was married. She didn’t have any fancy chef’s knives or expensive pots and pans, in fact her demonstration had a real “home cooking” vibe about it.

Food here is all about simplicity and ease of preparation. Jamie Oliver built a career on it. And there’s definitely something to learn from that.

Since I finished this over a week ago it’s about time I posted a pic. As you can see it fits well but because the cotton’s quite thick it’s a bit chunky. I like it though, even though I don’t think the length is great on me (I’m better with either very long or very short tops)

I’d really like to grill some ciabatta bread. However, the only thing I know about gas ovens is that they’re a really good way to kill yourself, whether intentionally or by accident.

So far I have figured out how to turn the gas on and stick my head in, Sylvia Plath-style (always good to know), however I’m no closer to getting my bread warm and toasted.

So if anyone can enlighten me on the oven that would be greatly appreciated. We don’t really do gas in NZ, unless it’s for fancy-schmancy stoves that light themselves. (Bugger, I remembered we had a sandwich grill in the kitchen which would have been great, only it wasn’t a sandwich press, it was a toastie maker).

In other news, I met up with Theresa today and she took me to a neat little Kiwi/Aussie coffee place called Flat White. What with the Kiwi accents filling the place, to the Anzac biscuits and L&P on the shelves, it really felt like home! We know how to do good cafes, that’s for sure.

Now, so I don’t leave you without a photo, here’s one I took in Chinatown yesterday:

Theresa thinks I’m weird, but I like colourful shop windows! In a way it’s very English, even though the food is Oriental.

I knitted these before I left New Zealand. They’re made out of some handspun yarn I got in Wanaka at the start of last year. Not the softest yarn in the world but such gorgeous colours. And with that I think I shall go yarn shopping! Stay tuned for more recent knits – I still have to take a couple of pictures and upload them.